Plant-Based Proteins Go Mainstream as Availability & Demand Grows

Press enter to search

Plant-Based Proteins Go Mainstream as Availability & Demand Grows

06/12/2018

In-home consumption of plant-based proteins has grown by 24 percent since 2015.

CHICAGO — Plant-based proteins aren’t just for vegans and vegetarians anymore as a growing number of consumers seek more protein in their diets and plant-based foods become more available and tastier, according a new survey from The NPD Group.

The global information company found a 19-percent increase in cases shipped of plant-based proteins from broadline foodservice distributors to independent (one to two units) and micro-chain (three to 19 units) restaurant operators in the year ending March 2018 vs. one year ago. In-home consumption trends are also growing, with a 24-percent increase since 2015.

More findings of the recent NPD survey include:

60 percent of consumers said they want to get more protein in their diets and are mixing both meat- and plant-based proteins into meals.

14 percent of consumers regularly use plant-based alternatives such as almond milk, tofu and veggie burgers. Eighty-six percent of these consumers do not consider themselves vegan or vegetarian.

The heaviest users of plant-based foods are those who are more likely to be on a diet or to have a medical condition, and consumers who tend to think of food as fuel, are more convenience-oriented than others, and less confident in their cooking skills.

One of the fastest-growing consumer segments who eat plant-based foods are those who are all about the taste of foods.

Beef alternatives make up 44 percent of the plant-based categories being shipped to independent and micro-chain restaurant operators.

Ball products, like meatless meatballs, used as ingredients have outpaced burgers and all other plant-based protein formats in terms of growth.

The census divisions that have seen the strongest growth in case shipments of plant-based proteins to foodservice operators are the Mountain/Pacific Census Division (Arizona, California, etc.) and the South Atlantic (Florida, North and South Carolina, etc.).

"It’s clear by the growth of plant-based proteins that this category has mainstreamed beyond those consumers who choose a meatless diet," said David Portalatin, industry advisor for NPD’s food sector. "Food manufacturers and operators have improved the quality and taste of plant-based foods over the past several years and these foods are appealing to a variety of consumer segments for a variety of reasons."